Help
Searching our website can be a challenging task due to the large volume of information it contains. To offer more control, we have designed the system to accept a number of operators which help you narrow the results of your searches to specifically what you’re looking for. With operators, certain characters have special meeting at the beginning or end of words in the search string.
List of the proposed rule changes.
This document contains a reference of helpful tips for users of the statewide immunization information system.
Use this document as an aid to translating foreign immunization records. It describes disease, vaccine and related terms in table one, and trade names in table two. The tables of information have been adapted from lists developed by the Minnesota Department of Health Immunization Program and Washington State Department of Health.
These instructions explain how to collect lead and copper samples.
Helpful facts about pertussis (whooping cough).
This document answers many questions about workers who are at risk of bringing home lead from work.
This fact sheet explains what West Nile Virus is, what the symptoms are, how the infection is spread, how long people are contagious for, what treatments are available, how you can protect yourself and your family, and more.
This document answers common questions including what plague is, what symptoms are, how it spreads, how long people are contagious, what treatments are available, and more.
This document provides helpful tips by the Trauma Nurse Coordinator Forum for reporting ED status to EMRESOURCE™.
This document lists all the information that is required to be admitted to Fort Bayard Medical Center.
The mosquito-borne viral encephalitides (arboviral diseases) are a group of acute central nervous system illnesses. The diseases of this group that occur in New Mexico are western equine encephalitis, St. Louis encephalitis, and West Nile virus.
Provides a wealth of information about plague for New Mexico physicians and healthcare workers including agent, mode of transmission, period of communicability, incubation period, common symptoms, specific forms of plague, laboratory diagnosis, treatment, surveillance, and reporting.
This helpful document provides a wealth of helpful facts about HIV/AIDS for Women.
This helpful document explains how to complete the HIV/AIDS confidential case reporting form properly.
This helpful document provides a wealth of helpful facts about HIV/AIDS for Hispanics.
This helpful document provides a wealth of helpful facts about HIV/AIDS for African Americans.
The most effective way to control bed bugs in your home is through a combination of chemical measures and heat treatments applied by a Pest Management Professional (PMP). Unfortunately, the service of a PMP can be costly. So we are providing information on how to control a bed bug infestation on your own.
There is no silver bullet for eliminating bed bugs. They present a challenge to modern pest control that the industry is still struggling to meet. To make up for the lack of chemical power we have for battling this insect, additional people and tools must be involved. Bed bug success stories usually involve people who live and work in a building (including a pest management professional) coming together as a team to battle this pest.


